As simple as this experiment is, it always surprises the spectators.
Experiment on Inertia.—It is not impossible to remove from a table set for a guest a large napkin employed in lieu of a table cloth, without disarranging the objects placed upon it. To this effect, it suffices to give the napkin a quick horizontal jerk in stiffening the edges held by the hands.
We recommend our readers to try this experiment only with table ware of slight value, for one cannot always be sure of succeeding immediately. Tinware may be employed very advantageously.
The Dice and the Dice Box.—A dice box and two dice are held in the hand, and the question is to throw one die into the air and catch it in the box. This is not difficult, but the difficulty is to cause the second to enter, for if this be thrown into the air, the first, which is already in the box, will fly into the air likewise and fall outside. In order to make the second enter while the first is already in the box, it must not be thrown into the air, but the hand and the box must be quickly lowered in freeing it, so that the first die, which is in the box, shall be at a less height than the second, which is in the fingers. The dice fall less quickly than the hand and the box.
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