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The Wonderful Pendulum
If you fill a wineglass with water and place a thick piece of paper over it so that no air can get in, you will find that you can turn the glass upside down without spilling a drop of water, because the pressure of the air on the outside will keep the paper from falling off. It is on this principle that the present pendulum is to be made. Take a piece of cardboard larger than the mouth of the glass; pass a cord through a small hole in the center of the card, and fasten it by means of a knot on the under side, then carefully cover the hole with wax, so that no air may get in.
Place your cardboard over the glass full of water, and by making a loop in the end of the cord you can hang the glass from a hook in the ceiling without any fear of its falling off. In order to make sure that no air can get into the glass, it is wise to smear the rim with tallow before laying the cardboard on. When we see a stage magician, we know what he is instantly by his clothing. We expect a top hat, tails or tuxedo and a cape. This outfit was introduced as the way a magician dresses by a man named Alexander Hermann in 1884. It has become the stand magician’s outfit.
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Magic Tricks
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Balancing Spoon
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Bridge of Knives
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Chinese Shadows
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Coin Trick
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Dancing Egg
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Dancing Pea
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Find an Object While Blindfolded
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Force of a Water Drop
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Hand Shadows
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Living Shadows
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Magic Thread
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Man With His Head the Wrong Way
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Mysterious Ball
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Obstinate Cork
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Revolving Pins
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Shadows
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Swimming Needles
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The Sentinel Egg
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The Wonderful Pendulum
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Think of a Number
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To Balance a Coffee Cup
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To Guess Two Ends of a Line of Dominoes
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To Light a Snowball with a Match
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Vanishing Dime
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