Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Awesome. I love art info.
In the late 1880s, cigarette manufacturers began inserting stiffening cards into their paper packs of cigarettes to strengthen the containers. It wasn't long before they got the idea to put artwork, trivia, famous people, and pretty girls onto those cards, grouped into collectible series. The cards, which continued into the 1940s, are highly valuable now, with the most expensive (bearing the face of stringent anti-smoking baseball player Honus Wagner) selling for $2.8 million in 2007.
In the 1910s, Gallaher Ltd of Belfast & London and Ogden's Branch of the Imperial Tobacco Co printed "How-To" series, with clever hints for both everyday and emergency situations. From steaming out a splinter to stopping a mad dog, these cigarette cards told you the smart way to handle many of life's problems.
(Please note these cards were published a hundred years ago, when safety was not as popular a pursuit as it is now. For that reason, we can't recommend trying any of these, as brilliant as they may be.)
1. How to make a fire extinguisher
http://images.nypl.org/?id=1643054&t=r
"Dissolve one pound of salt and half a pound of sal-ammoniac in two quarts of water and bottle the liquor in thin glass bottles holding about a quart each. Should a fire break out, dash one or more of the bottles into the flames, and any serious outbreak will probably be averted."- read the full article 10 Lifehacks from 100 Years Ago (from Mental Floss)
http://timeopinions.files.wordpress.com/2013/07/172685510.jpg?w=360&h=240&crop=1
Earlier this week, as the temperature in New York City hit the upper 90s and the heat index topped 100, my utility provider issued a heat alert and advised customers to use air-conditioning “wisely.” It was a nice, polite gesture but also an utterly ineffectual one. After all, despite our other green tendencies, most Americans still believe that the wise way to use air conditioners is to crank them up, cooling down every room in the house — or even better, relax in the cold blasts of a movie theater or shopping mall, where someone else pays the bills. Today Americans use twice as much energy for air-conditioning as we did 20 years ago, and more than the rest of the world’s nations combined. As a climate-change adaptation strategy, this is as dumb as it gets.
I’m hardly against air-conditioning. During heat waves, artificial cooling can save the lives of old, sick and frail people, and epidemiologists have shown that owning an AC unit is one of the strongest predictors of who survives during dangerously hot summer weeks. I’ve long advocated public-health programs that help truly vulnerable people, whether isolated elders in broiling urban apartments or farm workers who toil in sunbaked fields, by giving them easy access to air-conditioning.- read the full article Viewpoint: Air-Conditioning Will Be the End of Us (from Time)
http://timeopinions.files.wordpress.com/2013/07/172685510.jpg?w=360&h=240&crop=1
Earlier this week, as the temperature in New York City hit the upper 90s and the heat index topped 100, my utility provider issued a heat alert and advised customers to use air-conditioning “wisely.” It was a nice, polite gesture but also an utterly ineffectual one. After all, despite our other green tendencies, most Americans still believe that the wise way to use air conditioners is to crank them up, cooling down every room in the house — or even better, relax in the cold blasts of a movie theater or shopping mall, where someone else pays the bills. Today Americans use twice as much energy for air-conditioning as we did 20 years ago, and more than the rest of the world’s nations combined. As a climate-change adaptation strategy, this is as dumb as it gets.
I’m hardly against air-conditioning. During heat waves, artificial cooling can save the lives of old, sick and frail people, and epidemiologists have shown that owning an AC unit is one of the strongest predictors of who survives during dangerously hot summer weeks. I’ve long advocated public-health programs that help truly vulnerable people, whether isolated elders in broiling urban apartments or farm workers who toil in sunbaked fields, by giving them easy access to air-conditioning.- read the full article Viewpoint: Air-Conditioning Will Be the End of Us (from Time)
4. How to fell a tree
http://images.nypl.org/index.php?id=1135982&t=r
Just wanted to say that I found the illustration to the number 4 lifehack quite surprising. Until I read the heading again.![]()
4. How to fell a tree
http://images.nypl.org/index.php?id=1135982&t=r
Just wanted to say that I found the illustration to the number 4 lifehack quite surprising. Until I read the heading again.![]()
4. How to fell a tree
http://images.nypl.org/index.php?id=1135982&t=r
Just wanted to say that I found the illustration to the number 4 lifehack quite surprising. Until I read the heading again.![]()
I find it odd how many don't know how to cut down a tree. I actually learned that in middle school. Maybe it's growing up in a rural area or something but I thought that was common sense.
While most of us would use a chainsaw, you use witchcraft.
Safer that way. No danger of cutting my own legs off. Of course there is the danger of accidentally turning someone into a newt but that's a chance I'm willing to take.
Yeah, I do fellatree totally differently.
Yeah, I do fellatree totally differently.