Scientific American Magazine Vol 5 Issue 47

Scientific American Magazine

Volume 5, Issue 47

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Features

Accident on the Erie Railroad

Every Man His Own Physician

Passengers Over the Hungerford Suspension Bridge

Rejoice Not at Misfortune

Artificial Legs

The Siamese Twin

Thunder Storms

Velocity of Electricity

Oil Cloth Manufacture

Errors in Cooking

Girard and Mobile Railroad

Diamonds

Mr. Ewbank

Covering for Gravel Walks

Site of Paradise

American Scientific Association

A High Authority

Mechanics' Fair

East Tennessee Mining and Manufacturing Company

Glaze For Muslin

Espy's Theories

Consumption of Gas in England

The Danger of Giving the Wrong Medicine

Patent SultParker's Water Wheel

Soda and Chloride of Lime

Honor to an American Historian

Baltimore and Ohio Railroad

Watson's Sewing Machine

Commonplace Talk

For the Scientific American. Review of the Rise, Progress, and Present Importance of Cotton Manufactures of the U. S., together with Statistics, showing the Comparative and Relative remuneration of English and American Operatives.

Water and Coal Gas

Blackberries

The Electric Light—Mr. Paine's Discovery Corroborated by Experiment

Improved Rice Cleaner

Good Plan for Fertilizing Land

Mending Cast Iron Vessels by Fusion

Improved Power Loom

American Water Pipes

Southern Shoes

Improved Augur

Carbon or Coal

Wooden Cornices on Houses

Employment of Gutta Percha in Medicine

Devlin's Lubricating Liquid

Improved Railroad Sleepers and Chairs

Ide's Improved Grain Drill

The Progress of Invention

To Make Tracing Paper

The Gillard Light

Water Wheels

Improved Pile Driver

Brains

Patent Case—Woodworth Planing Machine

New Plour—Qulck Work

The Rapids of the Jordan

List of Patent Claims

Duggan's Work on Bridges

Back Volumes Scientific American

Important Notice to us

To Color Nankeen

History of Propellers and Steam Navigation

Moon

Climate

Inducements for Clubbing

Premium

Astronomy—Saturn's Ring

To Mechanics, Inventors and Manufacturers

Departments

To Our Subscribers

To Our Contemporaries

To Correspondents