Scientific American Magazine Vol 3 Issue 49

Scientific American Magazine

Volume 3, Issue 49

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Features

Attacked by Wild Bees

Home and Friends

Columbus and Cleveland Rail Road

The Harp's Wild Notes

The Pork Trade of the West

The Largest Building in America

Disagreement at Niagara Falls Bridge

The Weary at Rest

New London, Willimantic and Springfield Railroad

Ohio Railroads

Shameful Railroad System

Electrified Cotton

Expanding the Chest

Improved Method of Constructing Gas Burners

Vancouver's Island

Broad and Narrow Guage

Great Conflagration in Albany

The Commissioner of Patents

Late News from Europe

A Little Hero

The Benefit of an Open Mouth

A Propelling Gas

Iron Ore

Oil and Cotton

A Runaway Peer

American Pills

Springfield Mechanics

Den of Darkness

Drinking in London

Waste Steam Usefully Applied

Ole Bull Turned Fiddle Maker

Animal Magnetism a Science

Silver in California

Bramah's Planing Machinery

How Spiders Make Bridges

A Word About Lightning Rods

Truth and Sincerity

The Cabbage

Lapis Lazuli

Coking Diamonds

Indian Corn

Curiosities of Astronomy

Engine and Locomotive Boiler

Improvement in Printing Yarns

Invalid's Bed

Radiators

Hill's Patent Balance Valve

Machine for Cutting Files

Twyeres

Improvement in Pans for Making Sugar

New Spark Arrester

New Railroad Gate

Enamels for Iron

A Small Model

Hot Air Furnaces

Improvement in Fan Blasts

Our List of Patents

Novel Musical Instrument

Bullets

Window Blinds

Velocity of Electricity

Inventors and Manufacturers

Spoke Machines

Plate Glass

Arkansas Lands

Engines

The Diving Bell

Wrought Iron Nails by Machinery

Unprecedented Demand for Old Papers

Omnibusses in New York

Arts, Manufactures and Machinery

To Calculate the Power Required to Raise Water

Another Rotary Engine

Light Houses

Poisons and Their Antidotes

Premium Tract

Dressing Movements

To Keep a House Cool All Day

Wool Mattress

Paintings

Pen Holder for Weak Hands

Incombustible Wash

A Glaze for Earthenware

Alternate Rectilinear Motion

Powder, for Rendering Iron Malleable, and Cleaning it from Sulphur, Phosphorus, and Arsenic

Rules for the Recovery of the Apparent Drowned

The Scientific American

Departments

Union Magazine

To Correspondents