PLAN No. 380. LIQUID GLASS—THREE IN ONE
Of course you’ve heard of liquid glass as an egg preservative; but did you ever know it has no equal as a paste for making labels stick to tin cans, or that it is the principal ingredient in the best glue on the market for mending china, crockery, glassware, etc.?
A bright young fellow, who had a small drug store in a western town, knew all these things, and also knew where liquid glass could be bought, in quantities, as low as 20 cents per gallon. He bought five barrels of it, just as a starter, for he had large plans.
The liquid glass solution for preserving eggs is made by mixing one gallon of it with nine gallons of cold water, placing the eggs in a barrel, bucket or stone jar, and completely covering them with the solution. Place a cover over the receptacle containing the eggs, and set it in a cool place. At the end of six months or a year the eggs are as fresh as when newly-laid, and at the rate of $1 a gallon for the liquid glass the cost is about one-half cent per dozen eggs.
As eggs were plentiful in that locality, the young druggist bought 1,000 dozens, strictly fresh, direct from the neighboring ranchers, at 15 cents a dozen, and put them away in the liquid glass solution, so as to be able to supply the demand during the winter months, when they would go up to 60 cents a dozen. These he packed in barrels and set them in the basement of his store. Then in December he advertised in the city papers offering strictly fresh eggs, prepaid by parcel post, at the price named.
He received so many orders that he was obliged to employ a reliable boy to pack and ship the eggs to his city customers. Then he figured up the results. The 1,000 dozen eggs cost him $150; the liquid glass for preserving them cost him $1 for the five gallons; the wages of the boy who did the packing were $25; the parcel post charges were $10, a total of $186. He received $600 for the eggs, making his profits $414. That was a good start, and the next year he did four or five times that amount of business, increasing his profits proportionately. But by this time the farmers and poultry raisers of the community had learned of his success and began preserving large quantities of eggs themselves. In order to preserve them, however, they had to have liquid glass and gladly paid him a $1 a gallon for that which cost him but 20 cents a gallon.
There were several canneries in the city, to which the druggist shipped his eggs, and all of them were experiencing great difficulty in getting their labels to stick to the tin cans. The druggist promptly came to the rescue by offering them a paste fully guaranteed to stick, and readily sold considerable quantities of the liquid glass to them for $3 a gallon, being careful not to tell them what it was.
A little later he procured 2,000 2-ounce bottles, adorned with fancy labels proclaiming the merits of a superior glue, guaranteed to mend broken articles, and this he sold at 25 cents a bottle, or several thousand per cent profit on this remarkable three-in-one commodity.