. cr 41 <8CCC cc S5<:- , / The Book or Knowlisbge, Sure Ciiide to Rapid Wealth. Fortunes aro made every day by the mamifftcturing and selling of eome of tlio articles here given. Directions are given for makiiig all kinds of Cosmetics, Lotions, OintmontB, Patent Medicines, Soaps, Cements, etc. The secrets nsed by Metal workers, liovv to make Gold, Silver and the various precious stones, with many practical directions for working and using the commoner mctida. The secrets of the Liquor trade are fully detailed, and the choicest receipts and formulas are given for the making of diiTorcnt kinds of liquoi-s, including the new method of making Cider without Apples, all without the use of poisons or i-olsonous drugs. It 13 arranged and divided into departments for the use of Liquor Dealers, Tho Household, Druggists, Confectioners, i^anyfacturers, Huntcro & Trappers, Fa.^-niors, Perfumers, Medlcsil mon, Artists. Ko one, whatever ho his position in life, can fail to find some- thing in this book that will repay a liundrodfold ita price. Many of the receipts have been advcrtibed and sold for sums ranging from 25 cents to ten dollars. "We send the whole book, postage free, f jr 21 cents. SiifaiHG Mabs Eas^. This book nhowtj how any oiiC with an ordinary voice can, by proper managemen^t, as here indicated, become pruficitnfe in singing. It explains the pure Italian method of producing and cultivatin^iy the voice, the management of the breath and voice organs, llio best way of improving the ear, how to bing a ballad, with much other valuable information equally useful to Profes- eional Singers and Amateurs. Price 20 cents. mooLEs, ooiuioBOis km puzzles. The choicest, newest and best collection of Biddies, Conun- drums, Charades, Enigmas, Anagrams, RebuHscs, Transpositions, Puzzles, Problems, Paradoxes and oiher entertaining matter, ever published. Here is Fun for the Mirthful, Food for the Curious, and Matter for the Thoughtful. i-iiCQ 26 Ceuts, Copies of the above sent to any address on receipt of price. Address HURST & CO., Publishers 122 IsTassau St., N. Y. LORENTO'S Wizards' Guide; oxt, MAGIC MAD^ IIASr. By Loeento, THE OELEBEATED AND EENO'WNED AUSTKAIIAN WIZAED. vnil. HUEST & CO., PUBLISHEES, 122 Nassau Steeet. €opyriglit 1878 by Hurst k C^ An Invaluable Work on Practical rnd Am teur Taxidcnny, THE ] Sg^' ^ TAXIDERMIST'S GUIDE ;;b78 OE, THE AET OF COLLECTING, PREPARIl^G, MOUNTING, AND PRESEKVING ALL KINDS OF ANIMALS, BIRDS FISHES, REPTILES, INSECTS, Etc. This is a truly valuable and indispensable work for the use of the Naturalist, Traveler, and Amateur, or any one who delights in observing the interesting and multifarious products of Na- ture. It gives plain directions for skinning, stuffing and mount- ing all animals, from a mouse to an elephant. Also how to Catch, Skin, Preserve, and Mount aU kinds of Birds, both land and water. Also The Best Method of Presemng Bird's' ITests and Eggs. IT TEACHES THE AET OF SKINNING, PRBSERVING, AND SETTING XTP REP- TIIiES, FISHES, AND MOLLUSCOUS ANHVIALS, including Tortoises, Turtles, Crocodiles, Lizards, Serpents of all kinds. Frogs, and Toads. It also gives ihe best methods of Col- lecting, Preserving, and Polishing c:ll kinds of Land, Marine and Fresh "Water Shells ; the art of Breeding and Eearing Imeot:?, and Preparing Skeletons, including a number of the best receipts used by the most emi- nent Taxidermists of Europe for various articles used in the preservation and setting up of animals. Elustrated hj Many Pirst-Glass EngraYiags. PRICE— 30 CENTS. Sent by mail to any address on receipt of priceb LORENTO'S WIZARDS' GUIDE, How TO Cut Youe Aem oft without Hukt ob Dangeb. Yon provide yourself with, two knives, a true one and a false one, and when you go to show this feat, put the true knife in your pock- et, and then take out the false and clap it on your wrist undiscov- ered, and with a sponge make the knife bloody, and it will appear you have nearly severed your arm. A knife for the nose may be made on the same principaL The Basket Teick, A basket is used, cone-shaped, with six inches opening at top, largo enough to cover a person in a sitting position. With two hasps se- curely fastened to the basket, it is placed on a wooden platforia about two feet four inches square, which has two staple plates secured fast at the proper distance to receive the hasps which are fastened to the basket. One of the staples is arranged with the spring bolt, which can be shot back at the will of the performer, by inserting a thin steel plate or key between the cracks of the platform from the inside or the basket, which relieves or unlocks one of the staples, when the f)erformer has only to lift up that side of the basket ann.— Procure a plate, a timibler, and a small piece of tissue or silver paper. Set the plate on a table, and pour water in it up to the first rim. Now, very slightly crumple up the paper, and place it in the glass ; then set it on the fire. When it is burnt out, or rather just as the last flame disappears, turn the glass quickly upside down into the water. Astonishing ! the water rushes with great violence into the glass ! Now you are satisfied that water can be placed in a drink-, ing-glass upside down. Hold the glass firm, and the plate also. You can now reverse the position of the plate and glass, and thua convince the most sceptical of the truth of your pneumatic experi- ment. Instead of burning paper, a little brandy or spirits of wine can bo ignited in the glass ; the x'esult of its combustion being in-s visible, the experiment is cleaner. The Faded Rose. Bestored.-^T&ke a rose that is quite faded, and tiirow some sulphur on a chafing-djsh of hot coals ; then hold the rose over the fumes of the sulphur, and it will become quite white ; ia this state dip it into water, put it into a box, or drawer, for three or four hours, and when taken out it will be quite red again. The Protean Liquid.— ^X red liquor, which, when poured into dKiorent glasses will become yellow, blue, black, and ' violet, may bo thus made : Infuse a few shavings of logwood in common water, aud wh^ii the liquor is red, pour it into p, battle ; theA takQ 6 THE SHOWMAN S GUIDE ; OS, three drinking-glasses, rinse one pf them with strong vinegar, throw into the second a small quantity of pounded alum, which will not be observed if the glass has been newly washed, and leave the third without any preparation. If the red liquor in the bottle be poured into the lirst glass, it will assume a straw-color ; if into tho second, it will pass gradually from bluish-gray to black, pro- vided it bo stirred with a bit of iron, which has been privately Immersed in good vinegar; in the third glass the red liquor will .fissumo a violet tint. Eatable Candle Ends.-^T&ke a large apple, and cut out a few pieces in the shape of candle ends, round a,t the bottom and fiat at the top, in fact, as much like a piece of candle as possible. Now cut some slips from a sweet almond, as near as you can to resemble a wick, and stick them into the imitation candle. Light them for an instant, to make the tops black, blow them out, and they are ready for the trick. One or two should be artfully placed in a snuffer-tray, or candlestick ; you then inform your friends that during your "travels in the Russian Empire" you learned, like the Bussians, to be fond of candles ; at the same time lights ing ;70ur artificial candles (the almonds will readily take fire and flame for a few seconds), pop them into your mouth, and swallow them, one after the other. To Make a Watch Stop or Go at the Word of Command.— Borrow a watch from any person in the company and request of the whole to Btand around you. Hold the watch up to the ear of the first in the circle and command it to go. Then demand his testimony to the fact. Eemove it to the ear of the next, and enjoin it to stop. Make the same request of that party, and so on through the entire I]i-p''anaiion : You must take care in borrowing the watch that it bo a good one and goes well ; have concealed in your hand a piece of loadstone, which, as soon as you apply it to the watch, will occasion suspension of its movements, which a subsequent shak^ ing and withdrawing of the magnet will restore. To Walk iipon a Hot Iron J5ar.— Take half an ounce of camphor, dissolve it in two ounces of aqua vitse, add to it one of quick- silver, one ounce of liquid storax, which is the droppings of myrrh, and prevents the camphor from firing ; take also two ounces of hematis, which is red stone, to be had at the druggist's, -—and when you buy it let them beat it to a powder in their great mortar, for being very hard it cannot Aveli 1)0 reduced in a small one ; add this to the ingredients already specified, and when you purpose to walk upon Ihe bar, anoint your feet well with it, and -you may then put the feat into esocutioij without th^ slightest daiigep, THE BLACK ABT FTLLY EXPOSED. 7 To Pour Cold Water into a Kettle and Make it come oid Hot wlthord the Aid of Fire. — You give a pint of cold water to one of the com- pany, and taking off the lid of the kettle, you request him to put it into it ; you then put the lid on the kettle. Take the pint, and the exact quantity of water comes out of the kettle boiling hot. This trick is performed in the following Yv^ay : Tlie kettle has two bottoms ; boiling water has been previously conveyed into it through the nose. There is no passage for the cold water, which is put in when the lid is off ; consequently, the hot water can alone be poured out. This trick may be varied, and for the better; as the heat of the water may betray it, should the bottom of the kettle bo fulL You may therefore propose to change Avater into wine or punch. A coffee-pot may be made on a similar plan ; but a kettle is pre- ferable, it being more likely from its size and breadth to bafllo the examination of the curious. This trick may also be improved by an additional expense, so that whatever liquor is on either bottom may be poured out occa- sionall}^. For this purpose there must be a double passage to the nose of the kettle, and secret springs to stop either passage. Row to Cut a Man's Head Off, and Put it into a Platter a Yard from his Body. — To show this feat, you must cause a board, a cloth, and a platter to be purposely made, and In each of them must be made holes fit for a boy's neck. The board must be made of two planks, the longer and broader the better ; there must be left within half a yard of the end of each plank half a hole, that both the planks being put together, there may remain two holes like the holes in a pair of stocks. There must be made likewise, a hole in the cloth ; a platter, having a hole of the same size in the middle thereof, must be set directly over it ; then the boy sitting or kneeling under the board ; let the head only remxain upon the board in the frame. To make the sight more dreadful, put a little brimstone into a /€haflng-dish of coals, and s§t it before the head of the boy, who must gasp two or three times that the smoke may enter his nos- trils and mouth, and the head presently Avill appear stark dead, and it a little blood be sprinkled on his face, the sight will ap- pear more dreadful. (This is commonly practiced with boys in- structed for that purpose.) At the other end of the table, where the other hole is made, another boy of the same size as the first boy must bo placed, his body on the table and his head through the hole in the table, at the opposite end to where the head is, which is exhibited. To Discover any Card in a Pack by its Weight cr Smell — Desire any person in the company to draw a card from the pack, and whea ha has looked at it, to return it with its facQ downward ; then. 8 I'm: sHowMAN^s guide; oe, pretending to weigh it nicely, take notice of any particular mark on the back of the card ; which having done, put it among the rest of the cards, and desire the person to shuffle as lie pleases ; then giving you the pack, you pretend to weigh each card as before, and proceed in this manner until you have discovered the card he had. To Turn Water into Wme.— Take four beer glasses, rub one of ihem on the inside with a piece of alum ; put in the second a drop of vinegar ; the third empty, and then take a mouthful of clean water and a clean rag, with ground brazil tied in it, which must lie betwixt your hind teeth and your cheek. Then take of the water out of the glass into your mouth, and return it into the glass that has the drop of vinegar in it, which will cause it to have the perfect color of sack ; tlien turn it into your mouth again and chew your rag of brazil, and squirt the liquor into the glass, and ifc will have the perfect color and smell of claret; returning the brazil into its former place, take the liquor into your mouth again, and presently squirt it into the glass you rubbed with alum, and it will have the perfect color of mulberry wine. Magic Breath. — Put some lime-water in a tumbler ; breathe upon it through a small glass tube. The fluid, which before was per- fectly limpid, will gradually become white as milk. If allowed to remain at rest for a short time, real chalk will be deposited at the bottom of the tumbler. To Make a Party Appear Ghastly. — This can only be done in a room. Take half a pint of spirits, and having warmed it, put a handful of salt with it into a basin, then set it on fire, and it will have the effect of making every person within its influence look hideous. Hoio io Eat Fire. — Anoint your tongue with liquid storax, and you may put a pair of red hot tongs into your mouth without hurt- ing yourself, and lick them till they are cold. You may also take coals out of the fire and eat them as you would bread ; dip them into brimstone powder, and the fire will seem more strange, but the sulphur puts out the coal, and if you shut your mouth close you put out the sulphur, and so cheAv the coals and swallow them, which you may do without offending the body. If you put a piece of lighted charcoal into your mouth, you may suffer a pair of bellows to be blown into your mouth continually and receive no hurt; but your mouth must be quickly cleaned, otherwise it will cause a salivation. This is a very dangerous trick to be done, and those who practice it ought to use all means they can to pre- vent danger. I never saw on© of these fire-eaters that had a good complexion. T&E KLAeS AUT KJLLY EXPOSE®. 9 To Dip the Hand in Water Without Wetting it. — Powder the surface of a bowl of water with lycopodium ; you may put your hand into it and take out a piece of money that has been previously put at the bottom of the bowl, without wetting your skin ; the lycopo- dium so attaching itself to the latter as to keep it entirely from coming in direct contact with the water. After performing the experiment a slight shake of the hand will lii it of the powder How to Shoot a Bird and Bring it to Life Again. — Load your gun with the usual charge of powder, but instead of shot put half a charge of quicksilver ; prime and shoot. If your piece bears ever so little near th© bird, it will find itself stunned and benumbed to such a degree as to fall to the ground in a fit. As it will regain its senses in a few minutes, you may make use of the time by say- ing that you are going to bring it to life again ; this will greatly astonish the company ; the ladies will no doubt interest them- selves in favor of the bird, and intercede for its liberty. Sympa- thizing with their feelings for the little prisoner may be the means of some of them sympathizing with yours. Hideous Metamorphosis. — Take a few nutgalls, bruise them to a very fine powder, which strew nicely upon a towel ; then put a little brown copperas into a basin of water ; this will soon dissolve and leave the water perfectly transparent. After any person has washed in this water, and wiped with the towel on which the galls have been strewed, his hands and face will immediately become black ; but in a few days by washing with soap they will again become clean. This trick is too mischievous for per- formance. How to Fill a Glass with Beer and Water at the Same Time, Without Mixing the two Liquids. — It is done thus : — Half fill a tumbler with beer, then take a piece of brown paper or thin card, and placing it on the top of the beer, let it get perfectly still and quiet, taking care to keep the table on which the tumbler is placed quite steady. When all vibration has ceased, take some clear spring water, and having a small phial filled with it, proceed to pour it on the card as gently as possible, and in as small a quantity as you can, recol- lecting at the same time that the whole success of the experiment rests on the steadiness with which you pour the water on the card. You will by degrees perceive the water sliding from the card to the surface of the beer, and covering it like a sheet of paper, making them appear separated, one lying on the top of the other ; but the steadiness of hand must be preserved until the glass is sufficiently full. You may reverse the order of the liquids if you please — i. e. by putting in water first and then the beer, the same pro««ss will give the same result. 1§ THE sh©wman's gu^e; or, How io Kill a Fowl and Bring it to Life Again. — Take a hen or chicken, and thrust a sharp-pointed knife through the midst of the head, the Joint toward tlio bill, that ic may seem impossible for her to escape death, then use some words, and pulling out the knife, lay oats before her and she will eat, being not at all hurt with the wound, because the brain laj^s so far behind the head that it is not touched. To Light a Candle hy a Glass of Water. — Privately stick a small piece of phosphorus on the edge of a glass of water, apply a can- dle newdy blown out to it, and it will immediately be re-illuminated. The warmth of the snuff causes the phosphorus to ignite. To Light a Candle hy Smoke. — When a candle is burnt so low as to leave a tolerably large wick, blow it out, and a dense smoke, which is a compound of hydrogen and carbon, will immediately arise ; then, if another candle or lighted taper be applied to the utmost verge of this smoke, a very strange phenomenon will take place ; the ilame of the lighted candle will be conveyed to that just blown out, as if it were borne on a cloud. Tj Freeze Water hy Shaking it. — During very cold weather put some water into a close vessel and deposit it in a place where it will experience no commotion; in this manner it will often acquire a degree of cold superior to that of ice, but without freez- ing. If the vessel, however, be agitated ever so little, or if you give it a slight blow, the water will immediately freeze with sin- gular rapidity. L'on Changed into Silver. — Dissolve mercury in marine acid, and Immerse in it a bit of iron ; or, if this solution be rubbed over iron, it will assume a silver color. Two Cold Liquids when Mixed Become Boiling Hot. — Put into a thin phial two parts (by measure) of sulphuric acid, and add to it one part of water ; on agitating or stirring them together the mix- ture instantly becomes hot, and acquires a temperature above that of boiling water. The Incombustible Handkerchief. — Mix the whites of eggs and alum together ; then smear a handkerchief with it all over. Y/ash it in salt and water, and when dry lire will not consume it. Two Cold Liquids Produce Fire. — Put a small quantity of aqua- fortis into a saucer, add a few drops of oil of turpentine, oil of caraways, or any other essential oil, and a flame will instantly be pr©dueed. THE BLACK AET I'tJLLY EXPOSED. 11 To O-lve a Person a Siipernatural Appearance.-^'Pnt One part of phosphorus into sis of olive oil, and" digest them in a sand heat. Hub this on the face (taking care to shut the eyes) and the appear- ance in the dark will be supernaturally frightful; all the parts which have been rubbed appearing to be covered by a luminous lambent flame of a bluish color, whilst the eyes and mouth appear like black spots. No danger whatever attends this experiment, The Ploatmg Keedle.-^'Fout some water in a plate ; then drop a needle lightly and carefully upon the surface, and it will float. Luminous WrUvig.-^TfikQ a piece of phosphorus, and, during? candle-light, write upon a whitewashed wall any sentence or vvorcl, or draw any figure according to fancy. "Withdraw the candle from the room, and direct the attention of the spectators to the writings- Whatever part the phosphorus has touched will be rendered quite luminous, emitting a whitish smoke or vapor. Care must be taken \fliile using the pho-phorus, to dip it frequently in a basin of cold water, or the repeative friction will throw it into a state of the most active combustion, to the manifest detriment of th© operator. j^^ BeauUfid Transforviatlons.'—Voiir half an ounce of diluted nitro- muriate of gold into an ale glass, and immerse in it a piece of very smootli charcoal. Expose the glass to the rays of the sun in a warm place, and the charcoal will very soon be covered over With a beautiful golden coat. Take it out with forceps, dry it, and inclose it in a glass for show. To Break a Stme rolih a B^ow of ike Ks^— Find two stones, from three to six inches long and about half as thicii ; lay one flat upon the ground, on which place one end of the other, raising the re- verse end to an angle of forty-five degrees, and Just over the centre of the other stone, with which it must form a T, being up- held ill that position by a pie3e of tliin twig or stick an inch or an inch and a hali long; if the elevated stone be now smartly struck about the centre vdth the little finger side of the hand, the stick Avill give way, and the stone will be broken to pieces. The stones must be placed, however, so as not to slip, otherwise the feat will not be eliected. Magical Tea-spoons. — Put into a crucible four ounces of bismuth and wlien in a state of fusion, add two ounces and a half of lead and one ounce and a half of tin ; these metals will combine ane form an alloy fusible in boiling v^^ater. Mould the alloy into bars, and take them to a silversmith to be made into tea-spoons. Givf 12 THE showman's GmDE ; OR, One to a stranger to stir his tea with, and he wiU be greatly SUIS prised to find it melt in his tea-cup» To Gut and Tear info Pieces a Handkefchief^ and ir> Make it Whole Again.— -This feat, strange as it appears^ is very simple ; the per- former must have a confederate, who has two handkerchiefs of the same quality and with the same mark, one of which he throws upon the stage to perform the feat With The performer takes care to put this handkerchief uppermost in making up a bundle, though he affects to mix them together promiscuously. The per- son whom ho desires to draw one of the handkerchiefs, naturally takes that which comes first to hand. He desires to shake them again, to embellish the operation, but in so doing, takes care to bring the right handkerchief uppermost, and carefully fixes upon some simpleton to draw ; and if he find that he is not likely to take the first that comes to hand, he prevents him from drawing by fixing upon another, under pretense of his having a more saga- cious look. When the handkerchief is torn and carefully folded up, it is put under a glass upon a table placed near a partition. On that part of the table on which it is deposited is a little trap which opens and lets it fall into a drav/er. The confederate, con- cealed behind the curtain, passes his hand within the table, opens the trap and substitutes the second handkerchief instead of the first ; then shuts the trap, which fits so exactly the hole it closes, as to deceive the eyes of the most incredulous. If the performer be not pos3e33ed of such a table (which is absolutely necessary for other feats as well as this), he must have the second handker- chief in his pocket, and by sleight of hand change it for the pieces, which must be instantaneously concealed. How io Fire a Loaded Pistol at the Hmi, icUhout Uiiriing if.— This extraordinary illusion is performed with real powder, real bullets, and a real pistol ; the instrument which effects the deception being a ramrod. This ramrod is made of polished iron, and on one end of it is very nicely fitted a tube, like a telescope tube. When the tube is off the rod, there will, of course, appear a little projection. The other end of the rod must be made to resemble this exactly. The ramrod with the tube on being in your hand, you jmss the pistol round to the audience to be "examined, and re:iue3t one of them to put in a little powder. Then take the pistol your^eil:', and put in a very small piece of wadding, and ram it down ; an 1 iii doing so you will leave the tube of the ramrod inside the liarrel of the pistol. To allay any suspicion which might arise in tlie miiv.ts of your audience, you hand the ramrod to them for their inspection. The ramrod being returned to jon, you hand the pistol to some person in the audience, requesting him to insert a bullet, and to THE BLACK AET FULLY EXPOSED. 13 mark it in Such a way that h© would know it again. You then take the pistol back, and put in a little more wadding. In ramming it down, the rod slips into the tube, whieh now forms, as it were, an inner lining to the barrel, and into which the bullet has fallen ; the tube fitting tight on to the rod is now withdrawn along with it from the pistol, and the bullet is easily got into the hand by pull- ing off the tube from the rod, while seeking a plate to " catch the bullets" ; and the marksman receiving order to fire, you let the bullet fall from your closed hand into the plate just as the pistol goes off. A Vessel thM will lei Water out at the Bottom, as soon as the Mouth is ETiicor/ceo?.— Provide a tin vessel, two or three inches in diameter, and five or six inches in height, having a mouth about three inches in width, and in the bottom several small holos, Just large enough to admit a small needle. Plunge it in water with its mouth open and full ; while it remains in the water stop it very closely. You can play a trick with a person, by desiring him to uncork it ; if he places it on his knee for that purpose, the moment it is uncorked the water will run through the bottom, and make him completely wet. 2^8 Coryur^'s Banqud. — In which he eats a quantity of paper shavings ; afterwards draws from his mouth a barber's pole, six feet in length ; then draws out several yards of different colored ribbons ; then pushes out with his tongue an ounce of pins ; and, lastly, after well shredding the paper shavings, to show that there is nothing in them, a flight of birds come out from among them, their number ad libitum. This is really a first-rate experiment, and if got up carefully will excite much wonder. I shall commence by giving instructions how to make the necessary properties, com- mencing with the Barber's Pole. Gut some white paper into lengths three inches wide; paste them together, making a long length of ten or t^v'elve feet or more ; paint one side red, a strip about half an inch wide, the whole length of the paper, and at its edge ; glue on at one end of the paper a piece of round wood, with a small knot on the end ; then roll the paper up like a roll of rib-^^. bons. I will explain, presently, what to do with it. The next is to prepare your pins and ribbons. In a piece of soft paper, in as small a compass as you can, roll up a number of pins, and upon this packet roll your ribbons of different colors, making altogether a round ball, which you can conveniently slip into your mouth ; then make a long paper bag similar to those of the confectioner ; paint it in stripes — pink and white ; in this place your birds — can- aries, sparrows, or any small birds you can most conveniently pro- cure. The process will not hurt them, if you make a few pin-holes 14 THE showman's GUIBE ; OR, ill the bag to admit the air: you then procure some pink and white tissue paper, cut it into strips until you have a good heap, as many shreded out as would fill a small bread-basket, in which you place them ; at the right hand, liid in the shavings, you have the barber's pole, the ribbons and pins, and the bag containing the birds, and by your side a glass of water, of which you pretend to drink occasionally. Thus prepared, you present yourself to the audience. Sip a little water, make two or three preliminary ahems ! run your fingers through your hair, arrange your necktie, curl your mustache — if you have none it will be the greater bur- lesque to pretend to curl it— and then, witli mock dignity, address your audience : " Ladies and gentlemen, doubtless you have witnessed the performance of many conjurers, some of them clever ; but of all the professors you ever saw, none of them ever possessed such extraordinary abilities as the illustrious indi- vidual who now does you the honor of exerting himself for your amusement. My natural modesty and diffidence prevent my say- ing more. I shall at once commence my performance by intro- ducing the Conjurer's Banquet. I have some macaronies (allud- ing to the paper shavings). Excuse the vulgarity, but I must re- fresh (takes a quantity of shavings in each liand and commences munching them as a horse would eat hay, taking a little water oc- casionally, smacldng his lips, and seeming to enjoy the feast very much). After having proceeded in this manner for a short time, take up among the shavings the barber's pole ; place it, shav- ings and all, against your mouth, take hold of the little knob at the end of the pole which is rolled up like a roll of ribbons, pull it gradually out, and it presents the appearance of a barber's pole several feet in length ; put this carefully on one side ; commence feeding again upon your paper shavings in the same burlesque style, then take up your roll of ribbons and pins, and during the process of seeming to eat, you slip the roll of ribbons and pins in- to your mouth. You must chew the shavings you place in your mouth into a hard lump, and as you supply one mouthful from the heap you hold in your hand, push the hard lump of chewed shavings out of your mouth with your tongue. Well, you have the roll of ribbons ■^in your mouth ; place your shavings again in the basket, put your j , finger and thumb in your mouth, taking the end of the ribbon, and 'Ipull it out of your mouth with both hands, one after the other ; letting the ribbon slip through your hands as you pull it out, it will appear a .Ixrger quantity. After one length or color is pulled out of your mouth, sip n, little water, smack your lips, and again secure the end of the ribbon, pulling it out in the same manner as the previous one ; continue this until you Jiave pulled all tlie rib- bon out of your mouth ; you v/ill now feel with your tongue the paper containing the pins ; take a littl© more water, s^atnrate the THE BLACK AET FULLY EXPOSED, 16 paper and the pins will remain in your mouth ; these you push out •vitli your tongue, keeping tho lips almost closed ; spit the pins oat on a small tray, one that will somid when the pins fall on it ; it is more effective. The trick is now finished, excepting the flight of birds. Your bag containing them is at your right hand ; you slip this in among the shavings, and commence shredding them, and during this process tear the bag open, and the birds, of course, escape. The paper being painted in pink and white stripes, can- not be observed. A Dollar Bill Concealed in a Candle. — Ask some one to lend you a dollar bill, and to notice the number, etc. You then walk up to the screen behind which your confederate is concealed, pass the bill to him, and take a wax or composite candle. Then, turning to tho audience, you a.sk one of them — a boy would be preferred — to step up on the platform. At your request he must cut the can- dle into four fequal parts. You then take three of them, and say you will perform the trick by means of them, passing the fourth piece to the other end of the table, where your confederate has al- ready rolled up the note in a very small compass, and thrust it into a hollow bit of candle, previously made ready. You take up thi^ piece, and, concealing it in your hand, you walk up to the boy, an^l appear accidentally to knock one of the bits of candle out of hi 4 hand, and while you are stooping to pick it up oft" the floor, yoa change it for the bit which contains the bill. You then place it 0:1 the table, and say to the audience, * ' Which piece shall I take — right or left?" If they select the one which contains the note, aslc the boy to cut it carefully through the middle, and to mind that ho does not cut the bill. When he has made a slight incision, tell him to break it, when the note will be found in the middle. If th.-? audience select the piece which does not contain the note, you throw it aside, and say the note will be found in the remaining Eiece. When this is done with tact, the audience will naturally elieve that they have really had the privilege of choosing. To Melt Iron in a Moment, ai%d Make it Run into Drops.— Brin^j a bar of iron to a white heat, and then apply to it a roll of sulphur. The iron will immediately melt, and run into drops. The experiment should be performed over a basin of water, i -i which the drops that fall down will be quenched. These drops will be found reduced into a sort of cast-iron. To Change a Bowl of Ink into Clear Water, icith Gold-Flsh in i'.' —The same glass bowl as in previous trick. If your bowl has not a foot to it, it must be placed on something that will hold it high above your table. Soijie small fish, a vv'hite plate or saucer, a pieea ©f black gilk just fitting the inside of your bowl, a spoon of 16 THE SHOWMAI^'S €^UID1 ; 0|^ peculiar construction, so tliat in a hollow handle it will retain about a teaspoonf ul of ink, which will not run out as long as a hole near the top of the handle is kept covered or stopped, A large tumbler and two or three minnows will do for a simpler exhibi- tion, but will, of course, not be so pleasing to the eye. Place the black silk so as to cover the part of the bowl that is shaded ; when damp it will adhere to the glass. Pour in clear water to fill the space covered by the black silk, and place the fish in the water. Commence the trick in public thus : Holding the spoon-handle slanting up and uncovering the hole in the handle, the ink which you have placed in the handle will rmi into the bowl of the spoon, and the spoon being held carefully to the surface of the water, concealing the black silk, will give the spectators the impression that you fill the spoon from the glass bowl. Pour the spoonful of ink on a white saucer, and show it roimd to convince the spectators it is ink. They will see it is imdenia- bly ink, and tliey will conclude, if the spoon were properly lifted ©ut of the bowl, that the glass bowl contains nothing but ink. Borrowing a silk handkerchief, place it for a few seconds over the bowl, and feigning to be inviting fish to come to the bowl, ex- claim, "Change!" Then, placing your hand on tho edge of the bowl near yourself, draw off the handkerchief, and with it take €aro to catch hold also of the black silk. The bowl when uncov- ered will exhibit the fish swimming about in clear water. While the spectators are surprised at the fish, return the handkerchief, having first dropped out of it the black silk on your side of the table. Decline giving any explanation, as people will not thank you for dispelling the" illusion. ffoto io Swallow a Number of Needles and Yards of Thrend. — Tho trick is performed as follows : In the first place thread a dozen needles, put them in as small a compass as possible, and place them between the gum and tho upper lip ; you can speak without difficulty, and without any effort they will remain there. Let the needles be short ones, and take tho end of tho thread a little €lis- tance from the needles, and deposit it .between the gum and the lips in such a position that you can always feel it and pull it out when required. Thus being j^repared, of course unknown to your audience, you take your second dose of needles, placing them one by one on your tongue, seeming to swallow them, but depositing them on the other side of your mouth, between your gums and lip, which will effectually cohceal them, notwithstanding an examina- tion of the mouth ; afterward roll up between your fingers about a yaxd of thread; place this in your mo^h, and with your tongue cjonoeal it between your gum and lip. Take a drink of Avat4jr, maka a few ^rrj fa^es,^ th<>ai plaoo your finger aad t-hmsb in v«''>* fHB BLACK ART FUIXT EXPOSED. 17 mouth, securing the end of the thread upon which the needlo3 are threaded, draw it out and eshibit it, taking an early opportunity of retiring to get rid of the needles concealed in your mouth. This 1.3 a most effective trick, and easily performed. Be careful not to swallow the needles. To Make a Bird Seem as Dead. — Take any bird out of a cage, and lay it; on a table ; then wave a small feather over its eyes, and it will appear as dead ; but directly you take the feather away it will revive again. Let it lay hold of the stem part of the feather with its feet, and it will twist and turn about just like a parrot ; you may also roll it about on the table any way you like. To Make the Appearance of a Flash of Lightning when Any One Enters a Room xoiih a Lighted Candle. — Dissolve camphor in spirits of wine, and deposit the vessel containing the solution in a very close room, where the spirits of wine must be made to evaporate by strong and speedy boiling. If any one then enters the room with a lighted candle, the air will inflame, while the combustion will bo so sudden, and of so short a duration, as to occasion no danger. To Break a Stick placed on Tivo Glasses without Breaking the Glasses — The stick intended to be broken, must neither be thick, nor rest with any great hold on the two glasses. Both its extremi- ties must taper to a point, and should be of as uniform a size as possible, in order that the center of gravity may be more easily known. The stick must be placed resting on the edges of the glasses, which ought to be perfectly level, that the stick may re- main horizontal, and not inclined to one side more than another. Care must also bo taken that the points only shall rest lightly on the edge of each glass. If a speedy and smart blow, but propor- tioned, as far as can bo judged, to the size of the stick and the dis- tance of the glasses, be then given to it in the middle, it will break in two, without either of the glasses being injured. To Set a Comhustible Body en Fire by the Contact of Water. — Fill a eaucer v,ath water, and let fall into it a piece of potassium the size of a pepper corn, which is about two grains. The potassium will instantly burst into flame, with a slight explosion, and burn vivid- ly on the surface of the water, darting at the same time from one glde of the vessel to the other, with great violence, in the form of a beautiful red-hot fire-ball. To Fat a Dish of Paper Shavings, and Draio Them Out cf Tour Mouth Like an Atlantic Cable. — Preparation. — Procure three or four yards of the thinnest tissue paper of various coloro. Cut these up In strips of half an inch or three-quarters of an inch breadth, and Kftia thesa. They will fori7i a cdntinu&ui strip cf many fe«t" in 18 THE SHOWMAIvf's GUIDE; OR, length. Eoll this up carefully in a flat coil, as ribbons are rolled up. Let it make a coil about as large as the top of an egg-cup or an old-fashioned hunting-watch. Leave out of the innermost coil about an inch or more of tliat end of the paper, feo that you can easily commence unwinding it from the center of the coil. Procure a large dish or basketful of paper-shavings, which, can be obtained at little cost from any bookbinder's or stationer's. Shalien out it will appear to be a, large quantity. As you wish it to appear tliat you iiave eaten a good portion of them, you can squeeze the remainder close together, and then there will appear to be few left, and that your appetite has reason to be satisfied. Commence the trick by proclaiming you have a voracious appe- tite, so that you can make a meal off paper-shavings. Bend down over the plate, and take up handful after handful, pretend to muncli them in your mouth, and make a face as if swallowing them, and as you take up another handful, put out those previously in your mouth, and put them aside. Having gone on with this as long as the spectators seem amused by it ; at last, with your left hand, slip tiie prepared ball of tissue paper into your mouth, managing to place towards your teeth the end you wish to catch hold of v/ith your right hand, for pulling the strip out from your mouth. You will take care also not to open your teeth too widely, lest thlate, and let one of the audience count them. It will be found that there are only thirty, but the number which you were to catch was thirty-four. You will therefore say: "Well, we are four short ; I must catch just four—neither more nor less." Then, still having four coins palmed in your right hand, you catch again, and open your hands, saying to the audience, " Here they are." Oiirlous Watch Trick — To Tell at What Hour a Person kM Bise in ihz Morning. — By means of this trick, if a person will tell you the hour at which he means to dine, you can tell him the hour at which he means to get up next morning. First, ask a person to think of the hour he intends rising on the following morning. When he has done so, bid him place his finger on the hour, on the dial of your watch, at which he intends dining. Then — having requested him to remember the hour which he fir,^t thought — you mentally add twelve to the hour upon which he has placed his finger, and request him to retrograde, counting the hours you feaantila.iiie- ranged, with a clear interpretation of eacli ^ream, and the I/oeky Nnmbtrs that belong to it. It includes Palnxistry, or Telling Ptortunes by the lines of th» Hand : Fortune-Telling by the Grounds ia a Tea or Coffee Cfup ; How to Bead your Future Life by the White of an Egg ; tells How to Know who yo«r Putuzo Husband will be, and bow Soon You will bo Married ; Portune-Tellinff .by Cwds; Hymen's Lottery ; Good and Bad Omens. Mailed for 10 C«mtM HOW TO T ALK AND DEBATE. A zo^y raluald* book, asd om tkat wmj KUA aad woaMtBtbor miA flirL oldpoeseeB. Mailed for 1 5 CentM. 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