Scientific American Magazine Vol 4 Issue 21

Scientific American Magazine

Volume 4, Issue 21

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Features

Columbus and Xenia Railroad Ohio

New York and New Haven Railroad

The American Editor

The Dying

Railroads

Harston's Improved Drilling Machine

Delaware and Raritan Canal and Camden and Amboy Railroad Companies

Petrifactions

How to Catch Hawks

New Railroad Through This State

Terrible Explosion of a Locomotive

Launch of the Steamers Atlantic and Pacific

Notice to Subscribers

Devlan's New Lubricating Oil

Those Steam Engines

Fremont's California

The Prize Essay

Falling of a Bell

Vegetable Physiology

Indian Antiquity

Death of Mrs. Niles

Uncultivated Land

Safety From Lightning

Oliver Evans's

Progress of the Exemption

Borrowing Inventions

Singular Fact

Edward Wesson

The Water Cure for Burns

Cure for Cancer

Remington Again

New Application of Gun Cotton and Asbestos

Engraving

New Railway Signals

The Growing of Cotton in Australia

Manufactures in the United States and England

Machine for Taking the Yeas and Nays of Legislative Bodies

Singer's Gold Washer

Atmospheric Tube Telegraph

Machine for Splitting Paper

Improved Sofa Bedstead

Sofa Table

List of Patents

Turbine Wheel Governor

Manufacturing in the South

Back Volume of the Scientific American

Patent Cases

Telegraph Across the Atlantic

Extent of Oregon

The Telegraph Controversy

Mechanics Institute New York

Charleston, S. C. Mechanics Institute

National Convention of Inventors

The Scientific American

Modern and Ancient Works

Sensible Joke

A Great Plan --Railroad to the Pacific

Subterranean Canal Between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans

Trade Winds

Influence of Factory Life

The Introduction of the Potato and Flax into New England

Importance of Study in Youth

Lutes

History of the Rotary Engine

Prepared expressly for the Scientific American

Fire Proof Cement

Alloys of Metals

How to Treat a Watch

The Best Mechanical Paper in the World

Fourth Year Of The Scientific American

The Manufacture of Gold Leaf and Gold Wire

Departments

To Correspondents