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  • LEFT PAGE 340 MICA AND ITS VARIED USES The mining of mica has grown to be an important industry, especially since it has been found to be n insulator of great value in electrical apparatus; but little is popularly known of its sources. Some interesting informa- tion is given in an article on "The Uses of Mica," contributed to Cosmos (Paris) by Mr. Forques. Mica has been used for centuries, he notes, but its uses have greatly multiplied in re- cent years. Once its only value was as a glazing for lanterns or as a de- coration, but it is now applied in many new ways, due especially to the devel- opment of the electrical industries. The term "mica" embraces a group of complex sillicates. Its most remark- able characteristic, common to all these varieties, is the ease with which they split into thin, flexible and often transparent leaves. Mica is transpar- ent only in thin leaves. In thick plates it appears opaque with a black or col- ored reflection. This is due to the in- numerable surfaces of cleavage from which the light is reflected successive- ly, finally being entirely absorbed. Transparent sheets of pale color are often utilized for glazing, especially in stoves and lamps, and such use eabsorbs about a third of the world's supply. The writer continues: "The most important use, however, is now as an insulator in electrical work. Mica is infusible or nearly so, impermeable to moisture, elastic flex- ible and cleavable; these qualities are not posessed all together by any other known substance. It is thus employed for the insulation of the wires and bars of the armatures in dynamos, that is to ssay, between the conductors and the iron core. For this a very flexible mica is required-- not white mica, but amber-colored. Armatures with mica-insulated con- ductors are incombustible. "It serves also for the manufacture of the resonating diaphragms of tele- phones and phonographs. "In leaves of natural mica there are often crystals, which greatly limit its use. The inclusions, in particular, fa- cilitate the establishment of short cir- cuits. Thus the electrical industry has recourse to the use of plates of reconstructed mica. "To obtain these, sheets of paper as large as required are spread with gum lac, and powdered mica is sprinkled over them in as uniform a layer as possible. After drying a second layer of gum is applied, then more mica, and so on until the desired thickness is reached. The plate is subjected to a pressure of about 1900 pounds to the square inch and at the same time heated by steam. The pruduct thus obtained is homogeneous, free from cracks, of uniform thickness, and does not absorb moisture if the heating has been properly done. It may be sawed, cut and pieced with ease. Finally, it is cheaper than natural mica; conse- quently it has taken the place of the latter for work of great size and even for that of ordinary size. "In small establishments the manu- facture of this 'micanite' is carried on by hand, but on the large scale it is performed mechanically, so that one woman may make about seven cubic feet in a day, which would require the work of twenty women using their hands only. The manufacture of tubes, rings, etc., is carried on in a similar way. "Mica powder is used for the decor- ation of wall paper, as in the produc- tion of snow effects. It is also largely employed in compositions that are non-conducting to heat. "Veins of mica are found in all countries, but the industrial market is supplied chiefly by India, Canada and the United States."--Translation for Literary Digest. --- THIRTY WAYS OF CURING A COLD The Remedies Suggested to a Man When He Coughs "I recently contracted a severe cold from sitting on the rear seat of a street car with the back door open" said a change broker the other day, "and deter- mined, just for curiosity, to make a memorandum of the remedies suggested and find out the best way to cure a cold. "Before I left home my wife advised me to put a piece of flannel around y neck or I might have bronchitis or croup or something. While I was standing on the corner waiting for a street car, my next door neighbor came along and when he heard me cough, told me that a little chloroform liniment rubbed on my neck would do me a world of good. On the way downtown a friend hearing me croak told me to go to a drug store and get a two ounce bottle of glycerin and take a little of it every half hour When I got to the office, the bookkeeper said that he cured the worst cold he ever had by getting some anti-hay fever snuff. 'It makes you sneeze awfully, but it cures up your cold, all right.' "On change I was twice advised that nothing was better for a cold than boiled onions, and an amendment was made in one case to the effect that fried might answer, if taken with beefsteak. A wheat man told me that his wife always gave him red pepper in tea, and a pork man thought that was good, but that something better was butter and sugar melted together with strong vinegar, 'Then you put red pepper into that un- til it feels like you were skinning your throat, and you'll be all right in the morning.' "Five friends suggested quinine and four mentioned as many different drugs that I had never heard of. One told me to drink tar water, and another told me to go home and give my feet a hot bath and go right to bed. "A miller had a sure cure. 'Whenever I have a cold I go to my room and have a quart of hot Scotch mixed and set over a coal oil heater right by my bed; then I get into bed and hang my hat on the bedpost and drink that hot Scotch until I can see three or four hats instead of one; then I go to sleep and when I wake up in the morning I have a fine, large head but no cold.' "In the course of the day I found that goose grease rubbed on the chest, with a mustard plaster on the stomach and another on the back were infallible, so was inhalation of steam as hot as I could take it, tho brandy fumes were better; that hot beer was excellent, and that if I rubbed my head with wood alcohol it would help my cough."--St. Louis Globe-Democrat --- AUSTRALIAN HARD WOODS Antipodean Timbers With Some Re- markable Properties. That there are in parts of Australia large areas covered with valuable hard-wood timbers has long been known, but the actual physical prop- erties of these timbers, says Engineer- ing, have never, until recently, been properly investigated. In fact, we may say that, with the exception of one or two kinds such as Jarrah and Karri, which have been employed in this country chiefly for paving, no really reliable information about them has been forthcoming and even in the case of the two timbers we have nam- ed, our knowledge has not been alto- gether satisfactory; the tensile strength of Jarrah, for instance being given by three authorities as 2940 lb and 16,407 lb per square inch respect- ively. The result of over 16,000 care- fully conducted tests on various sam- ples of timber while in the condition usually procurable are described and analyzed in Engineering. The physical properties of "Yate" at once strike one as something quite uncommon. This extraordinary timber is as yet practically unknown, but it far out- strips all others in its tensile strength, being ahead even of salmon gum, bu 5000 lb per square inch. In compari- son and cross-bending the two tim- bers are more on a par, though in these also Yate still takes the lead. Not only is the 24,000 lb per square inch average tensile strength of this little known timber extraordinary, for it is equal to that of good cast iron, but specimens have been tested which gave much higher results than this; in one case an ultimate tensile strength of 17 1/2 tons per square inch being recorded. As a sawn timber it is probably the strongest in the world and, as far as our present knowledge goes there is only one that is heavier --that one being lignum vitae from British Guiana. The Yate tree attains a diameter of from 2 ft. 6 in to 3 ft and a maximum height of 100 ft It is exceedingly tough and breaks with a long fibrous fracture. Altogether, if this is plentiful, it should prove one of the most useful hard woods known. With regard to durability, many of these Western Australian timbers adds Engineering, stand high and appear to be admirably suited for use as railway sleepers, piles, etc., the most durable of them, perhaps, beingg Jarrah and Wandoo. These two tim- bers also if free from sapwood, resist the attacks of white ants in almost all situations. Sleeps of the former wood have, after being in use for nineteen years in damp situations been taken out and have been found to be quite sound. Very interesting cases are given of the lasting properties of these timbers, but unfortunately we mus pass them by. We (Engineering) may briefly mention however that two Jarrah telegraph posts that were known to have been in use for at least twenty years were found to give good results from 5 to 7 per cent be- low the average of unused seasoned timbers and two Wandoo slabs that had been used in the decking of a road-bridge for a period of 25 years were found to be thoroughly sound throughout. Jarrah piles that had been in use in salt water for a period of 72 years were also found to be quite sound, having been untouched by marine insects. The holding power of these timbers on spikes is also re- markably good, that of Wandoo being higher than any other. --- RIGHT PAGE 341 Thursday, February 21, 1907 --- DRINK SOUR MILK TO PROMOTE LONGEVITY Hardihood of Mountaineers At- tributed to Free Use of Fer- mented Lacteal Fluid Boston, Feb.20--Drinking sour milk disease and even to prolong life has been tried by a well educated Boston woman after an example set and preached by some of the most emin- ent savants of Europe and the results have been good. The apparatus is simple and inex- pensive. The treatment itself is easy and pleasant. It requires no physi- cian. It does not even call for great faith in its efficacy. The hardy mountaineers of Bulgaria, famous for their longevity, have been trying the virtues of sour milk treat- ment for years, and it was on account of the excellent consequences that medical men of Europe investigated it and determined the scientific basis of the results. The philosophy of the treatment has been dressed up in grave-looking sci- entific garb as different from the logic of the Bulgarians as erudite polysyl- ables differ from the everyday speech, but all that is merely the beliefs of the Bulgarians on dress parade. Man to Live 140 Years Professor Metchnikoff, the most fa- mous of the advocates of the sour milk diet, is severely opposed by reason of his theories and practices--for he himself always has a large bowl of sour milk in his laboratory--to Dr. Os- ler and his advocacy of a chloroform- atory. Metchnikoff would make the age of forty a period of life corre- sponding to what are now the teens. He can see not only the possibility but the probability of so lengthening the life of man that forty or sixty or even eighty will mark middle age. He and his fellow scientists ahve come to consider the limit which Buffon set as the natural end of human life--140 years--as the one soon to be attained, and they pick no flaw in Buffon's arg- ument to this conclusion from the in- cidents of comparative zoology. Learned monographs and disquisi- tions on leucocytes, phagocytes, ma- crophages, microphages, cirrhosis, ar- terio-sierosis and anaemia all boil down to the everyday philosophy of the Bulgarians: "There is something in sour milk that will make you out- live the man who doesn't drink it. There is something in it, we don't know what, that kills off the germ of disease." The scientists tell of phagocytosis, of certain elements in the blood that make war on certain invading germs and conquer them in many cases. They are now studying means of so rein- forcing these germ-eaters that man will be as immune from cholera, for instance, as the frog leading the sim- ple life in a stagnant pool from which it would be death for a man to drink; as free from tuberculosis as a pigeon cooing away happily in a pen where a man would soon die and as safe from diphtheria as a rat scurrying around to the ripe old age--of a rat--in piles of rags infested with diphtheria germs. "It is the most romantic chapter in pathology," said Lord Lister, president of the British association, more than ten years ago, and it is so entrancing that Metchnikoff and his confreres have been accused of mixing their sci- ence with poetry and utopianism. The scientist points out what was discovered years ago, that there art two elements in the blood, the red corpuscles, which constitute the larg- er proportion of the blood, and the white. To the white corpuscles they give the name of leucocytes. The white corpuscles eat up certain germs and they call these germ-eaters pha- gocytes Those phagocytes which prefer an animal diet and which have but a single cell nucleus they call macro- phages. Those phagocytes would have a nu- cleus, or stomach heart, arranged like a partly folded string of sausages, they style microphages. To the action of all those phago- cytes which devour germs, and the scheme on which the phagocytes work, the scientists give the name of pha- gocytosis. It is phagocytosis on which many of the beautiful ideals of Metch- nikoff are founded and in which is the explanation of why a Boston woman has been drinking sour milk to the betterment of her health. Finds Secret in Fish Metchnikoff was thirty-seven years old and already well known among bi- ologists when he went to Messina in 1882 to study primitive forms of sea life. Examining young starfish and small crabs under a microscope he saw the leucocytes, which were al- most transparent, rush out to small wounds which he had made with his finger nail on the skin of the animals. They went at the work of curing the wounds by surrounding the invading germs somewhat as a boa constrictor surrounds his prey. Sometimes the leucocytes were successful and some- times they failed. The germs which invaded the bodies of the fish did not differ essentially from those which attack man, so Metchnikoff really saw what takes place in many instances when the hu- man system is attacked by certain forms of desease. His discoveries he gave to the scien- tific world and to the world at large. Virchow hailed him as a learned pio- neer. Pasteur, the great, gave him cordial recognition. His fame spread all over the world, and in 1888 he went to the Pasteur institute in Paris as one of the associates of Pasteur. He produced a book called "inflam- mation"; he studied and experimented nine years for material for his "Im- munity," which became a standard immediately, and he wrote an optimis- tic study of life entitled "Nature in Man." He is now really the leader in original research at the institute, and is, indeed, a second Louis Pasteur. Leaving the phagocytes out of the question for the time being. Metchni- koff and other scientists concentrated their attention on the digestive tubes where the trouble starts. The microbe producing putrefaction was known to have an implacable foe in the microbe which causes milk to sour and chem- istry explains why. Could the longevity of the Bulgarian mountaineers be caused by their par- tiality to sour milk? Experiments were tried. It was found possible, in the words of Metchnikoff, for a man to "implant the sour milk microbe with- in him and acclimatize it there." The savants who began to affect sour milk as part of their regular diet noticed a considerable betterment of health. In the words of Metchnikoff again: "It is possible to transform one's internal flora from one that is savage to one that is cultivated." It is like stripping underbrush of the poisonous fungi. France and Switzerland imorted the germ of the ferment which the Bulgarians used to ferment milk, and this ferment is now on the market in Paris and has been imported to Bos- ton. The germ microbe of the ordin- ary milk differs from that of the im- ported only in being smaller and less powerful. Some of it is not pleasant to take, but in Paris today they are manufacturing a ferment which is called "lacto-bacilline," and which is pleasant to the taste. The secret of its compound is no trade secret, and it is possible that some Bostonians may in time see a profit in the manu- facture of the ferment. How Boston Does It The apparatus used in Boston con- sists of two watertight glass jars in a metal lined comprtment box. The jars are filled with ordinary milk, the ferment is placed in the milk, the compartment filled with water and when the milk is at the desired tem- perature it is drunk. --- ODDS AND ENDS An excellent paste for cleaning saucepans, boards sinks, tiles, discolored china, stone, paint, etc. can be made as follows. Take equal parts of whiting, soft soap, white sand, and soda. Place the ingredients in a saucepan, adding enough water to form a smooth paste. Boil until quite dissolved, and pour into jars for future use. Apply with a clean flannel, wrung out of hot water, and afterwards rinse with clear warm water. For cleaning windows, mirrors, etc. add a few drops of parafin, or methylated spirit to the water with which they are washed. It will lighten the pol- ishing process, and give a brigher lustre than ordin- ary water. A few drops of parrafin added to the water with which linoleum or oilcloth is washed will not only help to preserve it, but will also give it a better polish. A cheap furniture cream can be made as follows: Take four tablespoonfuls of turpentine, four ounces of castille soap, two ounces of white wax, place to- gether in a clean enamel saucepan and dissolve slowly over a gentle heat. Next add a sufficient quantity of boiling water to form a cream. This same recipe also makes an excellent boot polish with the addition of a little lamp black for black leather, and a little red or yellow ochre for brown boots. Talking of boots reminds me of one of two "dodges" I know of to preserve the life of our footwear, and also to keep their general appearance neat and nice. Boots or shoes that have become hardened by water may be rendered soft again by the application of a little parrafin. The oil should be applied with a cloth and rubbed well into the leather. It also tends to preserve the leather and so lengthens the life of the foot gear. Of course wet foot gear should be re- moved as soon as possible, and then dried, but not close to the fire or the leather will shrink and harden. The right plan is to stand the boots away from the fire and fill them with oats, the oats will quickly ab- sorb the moisture, and can then be dried and put away for future use. A splendid cleaner is Potato-water. Dresses, car- pets, rugs, and all sorts of woollen fabrics can be cleaned with potato-water without injury to their color. Put a pint of water into a basin and grate into it two raw potatoes. Then strain this through a seive allowing the liquid to run into another bowl contain- ing another pint of water. Let this settle, then pour off the clear part into a bottle for future use. Dip a sponge into the potato-water, with it rub the soiled garment or article carefully and then wash it with clear cold water. Wash brass ornaments over with strong ammonia using a brush dipped in ammonia for the fancy parts. Rinse in hot water, dry and polish while still hot with a leather. The polishing is done equally well when the brass is cold but not nearly so rapidly. Old oak furniture which has been neglected should be scrubbed over with warm beer. Dry with nice soft cloths and brushes, meanwhile boiling a quart of beer with a piece of beeswax the size of a pigeon's egg and an ouce of sugar. Wash the oak all over with this using a brush for the purpose. Leave till dry and polish with a cloth as usual. Pans and Saucepans that have been burnt should never be filled with soda water, as this although it removes the burnt portions also makes the Saucepan liable to burn again. Instead of soda water, fill it with salt and water, leave till next day, then bring slowly to the boil, the burnt particles will come off without any difficulty and there will be no after ef- fects. A cheap floor polish, that is equally good for stained flors, linoleum, or oilcloth, is easily and cheaply made, and most satisfactory to use. Ingredi- ents: One ounce of soap (odd pieces do quite well), three ounces of wax (candle-ends), half a pint of cold water, one gill of turpentine, one gill of parafin. Shred the wax and soap into a jar, and add the water. Stand on the hob, or in a cool oven till melted. When slightly cooled pour in the parrafin and the turpen- tine, and stir till mixed. Keep well covered. Use exactly as you would beeswax and turpentine. ---
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