You are here
قراءة كتاب Makers of Many Things
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
MAKERS OF MANY THINGS
EVA MARCH TAPPAN, Ph.D.
HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
BOSTON NEW YORK CHICAGO
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
The Riverside Press
CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
U . S . A
PREFACE
The four books of this series have been written not merely to provide agreeable reading matter for children, but to give them information. When a child can look at a steel pen not simply as an article furnished by the city for his use, but rather as the result of many interesting processes, he has made a distinct growth in intelligence. When he has begun to apprehend the fruitfulness of the earth, both above ground and below, and the best way in which its products may be utilized and carried to the places where they are needed, he has not only acquired a knowledge of many kinds of industrial life which may help him to choose his life-work wisely from among them, but he has learned the dependence of one person upon other persons, of one part of the world upon other parts, and the necessity of peaceful intercourse. Best of all, he has learned to see. Wordsworth's familiar lines say of a man whose eyes had not been opened,—
A yellow primrose was to him,
And it was nothing more."
These books are planned to show the children that there is "something more"; to broaden their horizon; to reveal to them what invention has accomplished and what wide room for invention still remains; to teach them that reward comes to the man
who improves his output beyond the task of the moment; and that success is waiting, not for him who works because he must, but for him who works because he may.
Acknowledgment is due to the Diamond Match Company, Hood Rubber Company, S. D. Warren Paper Company, The Riverside Press, E. Faber, C. Howard Hunt Pen Company, Waltham Watch Company, Mark Cross Company, I. Prouty & Company, Cheney Brothers, and others, whose advice and criticism have been of most valuable aid in the preparation of this volume.
Eva March Tappan.
CONTENTS
I. | The Little Friction Match | 1 |
II. | About India Rubber | 6 |
III. | "Kid" Gloves | 16 |
IV. | How Rags and Trees become Paper | 25 |
V. | How Books are made | 36 |
VI. | From Goose Quills to Fountain Pens and Lead Pencils | 46 |
VII. | The Dishes on Our Tables | 56 |
VIII. | How the Wheels of a Watch go around | 64 |
IX. | The Making of Shoes | 73 |
X. | In the Cotton Mill | 82 |
XI. | Silkworms and their Work | 92 |
BOOK III
MAKERS OF MANY THINGS
I
THE LITTLE FRICTION MATCH
I remember being once upon a time ten miles from a store and one mile from a neighbor; the fire had gone out in the night, and the last match failed to blaze. We had no flint and steel. We were neither Indians nor Boy Scouts, and we did not know how to make a fire by twirling a stick. There was nothing to do but to trudge off through the snow to the neighbor a mile away and beg some matches. Then was the time when we appreciated the little match and thought with profound respect of the men who invented and perfected it.
It is a long way from the safe and reliable match of to-day back to the splinters that were soaked in chemicals and sold together with little bottles of sulphuric acid. The splinter was expected to blaze when dipped into the acid. Sometimes it did blaze, and sometimes it did not; but it was reasonably certain how the acid would behave, for it would always sputter and do its best to spoil some one's clothes. Nevertheless, even such matches as these were
regarded as a wonderful convenience, and were sold at five dollars a hundred. With the next kind of match that appeared, a piece of folded sandpaper was sold, and