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 burns so readily that it ignites by friction and is used in matches. Rub the tip of a match with the finger. What is the odor of phosphorus? Phosphorus exists in nature only in combination with other elements. Lead, tin, silver, gold, copper, zinc, nickel, platinum, are elements.

There are less than eighty known elements; but the compounds formed of them are innumerable. Carbon is found in all substances formed by the growth of living things. That there is carbon in sugar, for example, can easily be shown by charring it on a hot shovel or a stove until its water is driven off and only charcoal is left. Part of the starch in a biscuit remains as charcoal when it has been half burned.

Oxygen and the Air.—The great activity of pure oxygen in attacking other substances can be shown by passing into a fruit-jar a lighted splinter, a piece of lighted magnesium ribbon, an old watch spring (or a bit of picture wire), the end of which has been dipped in sulfur and lighted. About one fifth of the air is oxygen and about four fifths is nitrogen and other inactive gases. Pure nitrogen will quickly extinguish a lighted splinter thrust into it. It is the oxygen in the air that supports all forms of burning. Less than one half of one per cent of the air is an inactive gas called carbon dioxid, a compound of carbon and oxygen. It is formed not only when wood or coal is burned, but also by the life processes of animals and plants.

Favorable and Unfavorable Conditions for Evaporation.—Pour the same quantity of water (half a glassful) into three saucers and two bottles. Place one saucer near a hot stove; place the other two in a cool place, having first covered one of them with a dish. Place one of the bottles by the stove and the other by the remaining saucers. After