Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 237, 24 September 1906 — Page 7

The Richmond Palladium, Monday, Sept. 24, 1S06. Page Sevea. V

Nervous Worn-Gut If you are in this condition, your nerve force is weak the power is giving- out, the organs of your body have "slowed up," and do their work imperfectly. This failure to do the work required, clogs the system and brings distress and disease. When the nerves are weak the heart is unable to force the life-giving blood through your veins ; the stomach fails to digest food; the "'kidneys lackpover to filter impurities frcJm the blood, and

the poisonous waste remains in the system to' breed diseas Nerve energy must be restored. Dr. Miles' Kcrvine vvilUfio it, because it strengJJUns the nerves; it is affe'rve medicine and tonic, that rebuilds the entire nervous system. "Several years aj?o I was all broken down. I was nervous, worn-out. could not sleep, and was In constant pain. I doctored for months, and finally the doctor said he could do nothing for me. I began taking- Dr. MM"s' Nervine, and used altogether eight nottlea. and I became tronjr and healthy, and now wefprh 170 pounds." II. O. CUNNINGHAM. 10S Ellsworth Ave., Allegheny, Pa. Dr. Miles' Nervine Is sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that th first bottle will benefit. If it fails, ho will refund your money. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind A HANDY SCAFFOLu. JVovel Device Especially Adopted For Work on -Roofs. A novel form of t scaffolding has re cently been invented which Is particularly adapted for use on roofs of build ings. It will be found very convenient when repairing chimneys or doing other work on a roof, as it may be eas ily handled or placed in position and when not In use it can be compactly folded for storage or transportation. The scaffolding comprises a pair of bars, each consisting of two sections which are hinged together. In use the bars are passed over the ridge of the roof, with the sections resting against opposite sides, as shown by Fig. "2 in the accompanying engraving. The sections, It will be noticed, are provided with undercut or T shaped notches, which are adapted for engaging links or loops used in supporting brackets. The upper or horizontal member of IMPROVED SCAFFOLDING. each bracket consists of a bar with perforations in its under side, and the vertical member of the bracket carries a pin at its upper end which is adapted to engage one or other of these per forations, according to the pitch of the roof. The method of linking the. bracket bars to the notched bars is clearly illustrated in Fig. 3. When the brackets are in position a scaffolding plank is supported on theni. In some instances It may be necessary to use the bars at their full length on one side of a roof that is, to reach from the peak of the roof to the gutter. In such a case hooks are used, which are connected to the bar by a loop, and these hooks are adapted to engage the peak of the roof, as Indicated in Fig. 1. As the notches in the bars are of T form It is obvious that the bars may be used either end p. f CHICHESTER'S C IpEtlNYROYA plus Ik TIE DIJlHO luteal Ask. isgist tor , ChJ-rsea-ter-la Brar w4 m bows, sealed' nd auk for H EWUHB. ten Ain flLI-ft, lot 8 Bst. Sliest. Always Ck!cbtvr OcrWI let. FhlisUelpbis, fa

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AUTOMOBILES SAID TO CE CARRYING OFF TH DUST. Experiments of Govern ment Experts to Ascertain Quantity Blown Away by Motor Cars Efforts Being; Made to Find m Remedy. The automobile stands accused on Official government authority of a high crime and misdemeanor. It ia destroying roads. And if It be asked, How so? the answer is: By carrying otT the dust The dust, strange though it may seem, Is the life of a road, without which It soon undergoes disintegration. This will be,,exp!ained later on, however. Meanwhile it will be interesting to describe some experiments which UncJetSam's road experts are now engaged in making, with a view to aseertsfnlng Just how much dust Is carried rciff from a ro.ld hv fin arprmra mnfor car traveling at various rates of speed. One method adopted for the purpose Is to mount a photographic camera on the front of a motor car, and, following close behind another automobile, to take snapshots cf the latter at different speeds. It Is quite a picturesque and interesting performance, the exact speed;? being determined by mean3 of stop watches held by men stationed along the track, while additional photographers are placed at intervals on the roadside to take pictures of the machines as they fly past. The work in question is being done in the neighborhood of Washington under the direction of the bureau of roads, which utilizes a certain stretch of roadway for a given afternoon, warning all vehicles to keep carefully to the right. Then something begins to happen. The speed law i3 abrogated for thai afternoon over this particular stretch DPST BAISLD 1JY AUTOMOBILE TRAVELING 'JHIIiTY lilXES AN HOCK. of road. Several motor cars of different types and weights are in readiness. The photographers and the men with t.top watches are duly placed at their appointed stations. Whoosh! Off goes a machine at a rapid rate, fol lowed closely by another, in the front of which, with the chauffeur, sits a man who operates a camera. The dust flics upward in a cloud, partly obscuring the automobile in front, but that Is what is wanted to show by photography how much dust is thus thrown up from the roadbed, to be carried off by the breeze, and so, in considerable part, lost. To say that dust is the life'of aroad is not putting the fact too strongly. It is the cementing material of the road surface, which, combining with the moisture contributed by rain, holds together the stony particles composing that surface, shedding storm water and preventing the particles from undergoing disintegration. Thus it may be said that dust is to a road what shingles are to a house. If it is taken away the roadbed goes to pieces. The amount of dust thrown up by the automobile Is in proportion to the speed at which it goes. But, In order to obtain exact figures on this point, the government experts take a series of photographs of each motor car, traveling over the same stretch of road, at ten miles, twenty miles, thirty miles and so on up to seventy miles an hour. A stretch of road with a fairly sharp turn is chosen by preference, in order that photographers posted at the bend may, with safety to themselves, snapshoot each motor car from directly In front, as It approaches, and also directly from behind, after it has passed by. Now, it is not merely for theoretical purposes that ipa -road bureau is making theso experiments. It is trying to find a remedy for the mis chiefa practical part of the inquiry which is being carried on simultane ously with the automobile tests above described. Something must be found. obviously, to keep the dust from being carried off the , roads, and the preventive seems to be either tar or oil. For some months past the experts have been applying tar and crude pe troleum to different sections of roads, and they have found that either (though the tar seems to be preferred) accord lisnos tlie purpose admirably. Pie

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it 'appears diet ua nitmn-anov. or tw costs less than 2 cent3 a square yard. Including labor, and it will ia?f for a year or so. though Just how long cannot be stated exactly as yet. The cost of oil is even lcsi The tar is transported for the purpose in tank cars and heated in the car by introducing a co!l of steam pipe into it and furnishIn the requisite heat from an engine oa wheels which is run up. alongside. In thi3 way the material is made fluid, so as to be easily spread by men with brooms or .otherwise over the surface of the roadbed that is to be treated. The tar gives a hard and smooth coating, resembling asphalt. It penetrates to a depth of one or two inches, and in the case of macadam forms a sort of matrix into which the stones of the top layer are set. A tarred street is dustless in tha same sense that an asphalt street is dustless. '"knife for dyspepsia"." ' argerr as a Care For Chronic Gastric Disturbance. The very latest alleged triumph of surgery is the cure of chronic dyspepsia with the aid of the knife. Dr. Louis Frank, professor of abdominal surgery In the medical department of Kentucky university, holds that in the vast majority of cases it can be cured with the surgeon's knife. Dr. Frank, in a communication to the American Journal of the Medical Sciences, pictures the pitiable condition of the chronic dyspeptic, going on daily from bad to worse. Medicine, he points out, seldom produces cure or even alleviation of the tortures of the disease. And this is but natural, he asserts, as the cause in al

most all cases is one that medicine cannot reach. This cause is pronounced to be gastric ulcer. And for it there is but one remedy the surgeon's knife the operation of gastro-enterostomy. All protracted gastric or intestinal disturbances are due. Dr. Frank as serts, to organic causes and are abso lutely never functional. When there is any question as to diagnosis he urges the exploratory in cision should be freely resorted to as a legitimate and accredited operation. Then if it is found and he claims that it will be almost invariably so found that the trouble is caused by gastric ulcer the remedy is plain and the surgeon's knife readily supplies it. The result. It is assured, is a complete and radical cure, with a restoration to the sufferer of that enjoyment of life of which he has been so long deprived. Garments For Ghosts. Some of our studious magazine writers are making a serious effort to discover what is the latest thing in clothes for modern and up to date ghosts. After talking with men who had met ghosts, though thoy claimed they had been drinking nothing but water, the Investigators came to the conclusion th'at the refined and particular spook made it a practice to appear among men dressed in garments that were cut according to the latest patterns of the day. . , This is quite a tribute to Faris, which sets the pace for the "world in such things. Doubtless the ghost looks over the fashion magazines or perhaps If he is busy tells his tailor to get up something in the latest style regardless of expense, for he is going to walk around on earth and must be garbed in a way that will do credit to the artists of Spookland. We do not claim to know for certain that this is right. You might ask the next ghost you meet. Eelatcd Luck. koo I WA t you to ;ir "Little Willie went fishing witliot; first asking his mother's consent." "Did little Willie catch anything?" "Well, not until after he got home." Young Impertinence. "Do you love your teacher, Johnnie? "Nope." "Why not?" "She'd be too much stuck on herseh if I did." It Always Follows. "I hear that Jennings has just got t divorce." ' '' - : "Is that so? When does the weddinj. occur?" Fargrcs PoSaonlcsr. About t ' '' i"ti of f": t ihTiifivTrtyr,52; m& if Gvfew

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.vT-; EXCELLENT APPLE. Of Commercial Importance In tbe Mibdle Atlantic States. This picture of York Imperial apples was furnished, by Professor John Craig to Rural New Yorker, which says: This excellent apple is cf great commercial Importance in the middle Atlantic states and ia sections westward to Missouri and Kansas. It seems to be about mmmm 0-MB mm TOEK liiPEEIAL APPLES. at Its best in the rough mountain lands from central Pennsylvania through Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina. Ia those sections the York Imperial grows large, high colored and well Uavored fruit. Orchardlsts there do well to plant this variety heavily, as is done with Baldwin in New England. The fruit is easil3 recognized by Its peculiar shape. It looks somewhat as if a round apple had been held between the hands and crushed into a square or blocky form. In some places this lopsided appearance is more marked than, in others. The variety originated near York Ta., and the name was suggested by Charles Downing, who called it "the imperial of keepers." The tree is thrifty and strong and does best on heavy clay soils. The fruit is excellent for storage when grown within Its true section. It is not an apple suitable for planting north of central Pennsylvania STRIKING CUTTINGS. Time Now to Start Iteddtnf? Plants to Carry Over Winter. The double flowering sweet alyssum is still a general favorite and makes an excellent edging for a bed of scarlet geraniums. A couple of Cats filled with rutted cuttings now will give an abundance of cuttings in spring, or a few plants can be dibbled in along the front of a rose or carnation bed, in fact in any old corner, and the space will not be missed. Heliotrope cuttings struck now will produce nice little plants for Easter time, and lots of cuttings can be got then for future use. A medium tem perature will do them all winter, but they cannot stand the slightest frost, so do not delay propagation. Salvia spieudens can be relied upon to come true from seed, but some very nice plants are seen in four inch pots covered with flowers at Easter time from cuttings put in at this season. They are subject to red spider and need close attention. Double flowering petunias are good bedders and are also useful as pot plants, and a number of them should be propagated now. Begonias Vernon and erfordii are largely used as bedding plants. A few seeds saved now and sown in January or February produce good bedding stock, more vigorous in fact than plants raised from cuttings. They make nice plants for winter flowering indoors, either in the greenhouse or in a window, and where they are needed for this purpose a number of them should be raised from cuttings now. There are few plants so easily handled es these. In freedom from various pests they are unique and are thus admirably adapted to the amateur or those of limited facilities. Verbenas are easily raised from seed. Only the colors are then mixed. This, however, is no drawback to many. Some like to have the colors separate, and those who do so must propagate from cuttings now. Oldest Date In Historx. Professor James I. Breasted, the Egyptologist of the University of Chicago, has just announced in an article in the Biblical World that the oldest fixed date in history is 4241 B. C. In that year, he says, the calendar was established, the year beginning on what would be July 19. Consequently the calendar now in use is G.147 yean? old. The professor arrived at these conclusions during his long exploration trip to the Nile valley, when he compared the astronomical dates in the old and middle kingdoms of Ecypt-

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INTENSE CULTUK!

It Will Give C!ff Crops of Potstct, Cabl3rea and Hay. From eiperieaca and extended ol-servation-I cm satleHeJ that not only can good cultivated crops be grown for a term of years without the use of stable manures, but that large hay cropscan be raised after each treatment and the fertility of a farm be increased materially. One of the b2st methods and a profit able rotation in fertilizer faniing it my experience has been to plow under sod in the spring, then by frequent planking and harrowing up to the first week in June prepare a faultless seed bed. One ton to the acre of high grade cabbage fertilizer should be broadcast ed and harrowed in, then as near June 10 as possible plant winter cabbage seed in hills by 3 feet, using 500 pounds per acre of ainmoniated fertilizer, with a low percentage of potash, in the hills. As soon as the size of the young cabbages will allow they should be thinned to one plant in a hill. Cabbage Dell slits In Cultivation. The cabbage is a vegetable that must have plenty of cultivation. Every dastillage would d it no harm, and if good culture is giveti a yield of eighteen to twenty tons of cut cabbages from the acre can be raised under ths? above treatment and with good climatic conditions. By the cellar method of storage the heads are cut clo'se. leaving the roots in the ground, so that noue of the unused fertilizer is removed and much value in the stumps and bottom leaves returned to the soil. The second year in the rotation the laud is planted early to potatoes, using one ton fertilizer to the acre, half or more broadcasted. Thi treatment should produce 200 to 400 bushels potatoes, varying in climatic and soil conditions. The crop should be dug as early as practicable, and if dug by machine the soil gets practically Another plowing, after which the land is harrowed and Immediately sown to grass without fertilizer. Following this treatment, in which two aud a quarter tons high grade fertilizer have been applied to the acre and two good hoed crops removed, we can expect three years of satisfactory mowing, when the land can again be taken up or by annual top dressing with a complete top dressing fertilizer kept in grass for a much longer period. The better plan, however, is to pljw up often, fis a better sod is turned under and a deeper soil that holds moisture better created. If the hay Is sold as a cash crop the five crops named should at a low estimation sell for $450, with a cost for fertilizer of about $S3 and the farm improve in fertility under such treatment. E. W. Sargent, Massachusetts, iu New England Homestead. A FLOCK OF SHEEP. A Mieliiaaij 'Inn's Plan For Develop. inK n Flock of Merino. The flock I started with were of Me rino blood aud would weigh eighty-five to ninety-five pounds and sheared five to six pounds of wool per head. I had been using Shropshire rams, selling the lambs to feeders, until my flock was getting old, and I had to make a change. My idea of u ewe was one that would weigh from 120 to 130 pounds, shear tea pounds or more ot wool, with a long, smooth back and one or two folds on the neck. The kind of ram I wanted was like the ewe. only larger, with eight to twenty pounds of long, white wool. I found a ram of the National Delaine breed that weighed 175 pounds and sheared seventeen pounds of wool. That was ten years ago, and I have been breeding with the same idea evei since. How well I have succeeded is shown by my present flock, which consists of sixty-five ewes that will aver age 120 pounds and shear about ten pounds of wool. The ewes are fed corn stover in the morning, one-half pound per head of corn and oats at noon aud clover hay at night, with water before them ail the time and good salt twice a week On pleasant days the corn stover is fed in the yard, which gives them plenty of exercise. They iire housed at night and during all stormy weather. I do not want them to get wet from the 1st of November until turned on pasture. The barns are quite warm and venti lated with a number of windows. In this locality the first half of April is early enough for lambs to come and I find it best to have the ewes sheared before lambing. With this management I have increased my flock 100 to 123 per cent a year. Each year I save fifteen or twenty of my very best ewe Iambs which come nszr my ideal. I give them the very best care, all the clover hay they will eat and aboui three-fourths of a pound of grain pe; day, a mixture cf com and oats, bul' and half. I want to get as mud growth as possible while they an young. They are bred at nineteen t twenty rcoatlis of age, and I let a: mai); v as 1 krv

HOSTS OF GOOD PEOPLE AH OTer This Blessed Land Rise Up and Praise Dr. Pierce's Family Medicines. Common Gratitude Prompts This Sentiment in Favor of Dr. Pierce's Medicines. These people, so ready and anxious to recommend Dr7 Pierce's Medicines, have themselves been cured, or some friend or loved one baa been cured, by thesemedicines. Naturaiiy, a sense of gratitude prompts euch persons to recommend Dr. Fierce's medicines to other afliictfd ones. Notwithstanding that tljese jnedicines have been on general fale, in drug and medicine ftoree, for more thbn two decades, yet their ea!e continues to grow as it could not were

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ernes euiDorariiv iniured their taise, e pus and libelous article Journal liladelphia, yet their sale nsners ox in paper were brought to them in con uence oi their malicious Prescription.

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t"rilT.f ' ' iinnn-ru ferine rn.rjiibiifaifrg l"r A Thereupon Dr. Pierce decided to take a tx

world a tun list ot the ingredients entering into rns medicines, and this completely confounded his malicious traducers and vindicated both the Doctor and his medicines. In consequence, his medicines have enjoyed a popularity and increase in sale of late, amounting almost to a boom, and it isAelieved that this greatly increased demand is due largely to the fact of Dr. Pces open, honest way of treating his patrons and patients by reposing conCaence in thoee who trust in him and his medicines. He has "no secrets toXithhold from them. He publishes the composition of his medicines openly Ryc above board, bo that

an who use tnem may Know exactly placed in a elas all by themselves and patent medicines, for titer are in fncf WHAT THEY CURE. People often ask "What do Dr. Pierce's two leading medicines 'Golden Medical Discovery ' and 'Favorite Prescription cure? Briefly, the answer Is that "Golden Medical Discovery " f most notent al-' teraiTvrfr hl..rpiirilieru ami innu- or luvicorator. and act especially favorably n a curative uv upon an in.' ni'inr, ft miit; surface as -of the nasal DasaKe7 iroat. bronchial tubes, stomach, bowels and bladder curing a large pe rcentage ofi catarrhal cases whether the disease i fects the nasal nassatres. the thro; larynx, bronchia, stomach (as oatarrJrjfl dyspepsia), Iwwels (as mucous diarrl bladder, uterus or other pelvic ladder. IS. ;es Even in tho chronic or ulcerative of these affections, it is generally ful in affectina cures. In fact the cessoioen t, the Medical Discovery "is without d most successful constitutional y for all forms of catarrhal diseasi 'nown to modern medical science. chronic Nasal Catarrh Dr. Sages Catf Remedy fluid should be used for inning and cleansing out the nasal iges whilo taking the- "Discovery "jtf or its blood cleansing and specific, Jff'aling effects upon the mucous lining nwinbranes. This combined local and gaii.jXl treatment will cure a very large peraejlf age of the worst cases of chronic nasally t a rrh. no matter of how ma nv years stlfriding they may be. A? to ' Mic "fovorittl Prescription - t Is nfKU,..r f,,r hf cure of one class of dis-ea.-" only those weaknesses, derange menu and irregularities peculiar to women. It Is a powerful, j'et gently acting, invigorating tonic and nervine. For weak, worn-out, over-worked women no matter what has caused the break-down. "Favorite Prescription" will be found most effective in building up the strength, regulating the womanly functions, subduing pain and bringing about a healthv, strong, vigorous condition of the whole system. Dr. Pierce believes that our American forests abound in most valuable medicinal roots for the cure of most of our obstinato and most fatal diseases, if wo would properly investigate them; and, in confirmation of this firm conviction, he points with pride to the almost marvelous cures effected by his "Golden Medical Discovery," which has proven itself to bo the most efficient stomach tonic, liver invigorator, heart tonic and regulator, and blood cleanser known to medical science. Not less marvelous, in the unparalleled cures it is constantly making of woman's many peculiar affec lambs, 'i.io minus irum uiebe ewes make excellent feeders. F. E. Lowe. Michigan, in American Agriculturist. For Knrly Winter CabbnKr. The Danish Ball Head is my favorite for an early crop. I raised plenty of heads last year weighing from eight to twelve pounds each and hard as a rock. Early Winningstadt is a fine variety for a leginner. It grows quickly, and every plant will make a head, nowever. the finest of all cabbages for family use mfd one very easily grown Is the Early Savoy. I have sown Reed of this in the open when sowing turnips in the month of August and raised the finest of golden heads that stood all through the winter. A Savoy cabbage beats any collards I ever saw out of siyht when it comes to something fine to eat. says a Tolas correspondent la an exchange. Elevator Fell. Columbus. O., Sept. 22. By the breaking of the steel casting above the elevator at the Buckeye Transfer and Storage company warehouse, the elevator was precipitated to the basement from the fourth floor. There were 10 big rol!s of newspaper paper on it and at the bottom of the shaft John Keyser, drayman, was buried under the rolls cf paper, being instant!, killed. George Waterman was badl crushed about the head and body and was taken to St. Francis hospital. Different. "Why don't you elope with her? "But. good gracious, man, if yon are perfectly willing for me to marry your daughter I cannot see any object to br attained by our eloping." "Can't rou? How will It be if I of fer you half of what I save on the wed ding?" Houston Post. ToTBce, Voyage was formerly any Journe, whether by sea or land it did not mat Cer.

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published in 1904 in the Ladies Home is greater to-day than ever. . The pubaccount and judgment obtained against article fflnrpminc Dr. Pirc' Kmnnto ricermng ir, neree s ravonie rovon in rmep c-orf nnd ystantial amount. step and publish to the whole wnat they arevAKing. lhus they are cannot be" coivWered as either secret or neither. tions, werJjrTesses and distressing derangements, yp. Pierce's Favorite Inscription. asrVs amply attested by thousands of unsycited testimonials contributed by gratfl patients who have been cured by itoiiucorrnea. painim periods, irregulariti.yTprolapsua and other displacements. tion of uterus and kindred affecss, often after many other advertised ctnes nad tailed. Both these world-famed medicines are holly made up from the glyceric ex tracts of native, medicinal roots, found in our American forests. The processes employed in their manufacture were original with Dr. Pierce, ai d they are carried on by skilled chemists and pharmacists with the aid of apparatus mid appliances specially designed and built for this purpose. Both medicines are entirely free from alcohol and all other harmful, habit-forming drugs. A full list of their ingredients is printed on each of their wrappers. They are both made of such native medicinal roots as have received the strongest endorsement and praise for their curative virtues from the most prominent writers on Mnteri Mediiii in this country. What is said of their power to cure tlieiseversbdiseases for which they are advised .mav bo easily learned by sending your name and address to Dr. R. V. Pierce. Buffalo, N. Y.. for a little booklefwhicbthe has compiled, containing copious extracts from numerous standard, medical books, which are consulted as atrtnorities by physicians of the several fehobls-of practice for their guidance;in .prescribing. It is free to aix. , A-postal card request will bring it. You don't have to re Jjr solely upon the manufacturer's sajsso as to tLejpower of Dr. Pierce's medicines tocnre..as' with other medicines-sold through druggists. You havetho-dMntcrcDfed'testimony of a host of the leading mecUral writers and teachers. Send for this copious testimony. It can be rc'leei upon to be truthful because it is' entirely disinterested. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant, Pellets cure constipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. One "Pellet"' Is a gentle laxative, andvtwo a mil cathartic. Druggists sell them, avfl nothing is "just as good." They areXAe orfgiioi Little Liver Pills first pvvup by old Dr. Pierce over 40 yetyjr ago. Sfuch imitated, uui, never eqyyaea. Xhey are tiny sugar-coated gratyvfes easy to take as canuy. MERTZ'S IVORNING PRAYER. I want all Ae dead hogs, cows, sheep, horsey; for fertilizing purposes. Both! planes, 103, when, you have dead nals, and they will be promptly hauled away. Lloid .Kir am an Kxplilc. Those who -have seen liquid air, a transparent, - hissing liquid, ateaxoiag from its intense cold,. have difficulty In conceiving it as1 an explosive ne -powerful as dynamite. Tet,"iaccordlnto the report of tbeS6c!etedEncouragen3ent,' this result 4sobtainedbyi mixi a liquid air and powdered charcoal and'the explosion is caused" in theisameCmanner as is that of dynamite,-by. detonation. The power of ,a charge. of liquid air may be increased by adding, sulphur, petroleum and cotton. Asan explosive for industrial purposes-it 4s off particular value,, since the property of explosiveness only lasts for, some minutes. A charge of liquid alr'need, therefore, only be prepared when It is about to be put in ase, and if It should faiUno danger is to be apprehended, since it is no longer capable of exploding. " Good rc?n,7G AT SJO ,TO SIOO JTR ACRE f An coarai0BC0 E. MOORE I

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