. Railway and locomotive engineering : a practical journal of railway motive power and rolling stock . rplus earnings Mr. Brady put intoenterprises which his keen judgment de-cided upon as sound, so he is now a richman with no one, to thank but himselfand well able to buy two or a dozen au-tomobiles, just as inclination tempts him. Like most men, Mr. Brady has a hobbywhich, in his case, is the collecting ofdiamonds. While jewelry seldom adornshis person, Mr. Brady is said to have analmost unrivaled collection of diamondswliich he sometimes shows to his this account he is quite Often


. Railway and locomotive engineering : a practical journal of railway motive power and rolling stock . rplus earnings Mr. Brady put intoenterprises which his keen judgment de-cided upon as sound, so he is now a richman with no one, to thank but himselfand well able to buy two or a dozen au-tomobiles, just as inclination tempts him. Like most men, Mr. Brady has a hobbywhich, in his case, is the collecting ofdiamonds. While jewelry seldom adornshis person, Mr. Brady is said to have analmost unrivaled collection of diamondswliich he sometimes shows to his this account he is quite Often differ-entiated from others of his family nameby the prefix of his hobby. Another ofAfr. Bradys desires is to be the bestdressed man in town. In this he seemsto achieve the same decided success whichhe has reached in other dircctiuus. James B. Brady is a big hearted, gen-erous man, and the greatest pleasure hederives from the possession of automo-biles, horses and other mediums of en-tertainment is in lending them to hismany friends, and automobiling will gainniiuh from the interest Mr. Bradv has. MR. J.\MKS p. \DV. taken in it.—Angus Sinclair in Automo-bile Magazine. as yet known for producing a broiize-likc surface, by rubbing over the sur-face of the iron an acid solution of cop-per or an iron solution, letting it dryin the air, brushing off the rust pro-duced in this way, and an abundantrepetition of this method, give a moreor less reddish brown crust or rust onthe iron body. Objects formed of ironcan easily be covered with copper orbrass by dipping them in the requisitesolution, or by submitting them to thegalvanic method. The surface so pre-pared, however, peels off in a shorttime, by exposure to moist air in par-ticular. By the method given Itelow it ispossible to cover iron objects, es-pecially such as have an artistic aim,with a fine bronze like surface; it re-sists pretty satisfactorily the influenceof moisture, and one is, moreover, en-abled to apply it to any


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